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    Gaze Eye Contact

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    Eye Contact: The Power of The Gaze Whilst engaging in social communication, whether verbal or non-verbal, eyes play a crucial role in expressing and identifying certain focus points and attention cues among humans. Direct and prolonged eye contact is more common during communication in European American and Arab cultures, while Latin American, Japanese, and African cultures perceive direct eye contact as an insult (Weiten, 2012). This research paper will entail research wholly from American and…

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    Emotional Display Rules

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    . Cultural meanings produce differences in the nature of relationships across cultures, which recruit different display rules to affect the regulation of emotional expressions in those relationships (Hwang. 2012). A main reason differences in emotional expressions exist may be because of cultural display rules. Hwang study focuses on the, perceived relationship commitment, which is, the motivation to meet and interact in the future and associate a feeling of closeness…

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    The Basics of Gene Expression and Control Genetics is a very diverse field of science, because it encompasses so many aspects of not only what happens inside organisms, but also how offspring relate to parents and ancestors and many other processes. Although every bit of genetics is important, many things in an organism would not be possible without the expression of genes. Through expressions of genes, organisms provide for themselves and "fulfill" what is the basis of their genetic…

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    ‘Anytime someone is punished for pure expression, that is an attack on the principles of free speech,’ Shibley said. ‘It’s not the government’s job to pick what speech is good and what speech is bad. We’ve always said the remedy for bad speech is more speech, ‘ “(Stanley-Becker, Isaac). In…

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    Hypothesis: 1.) Animals with nocturnal sleep cycles will have greater similarity in the PER gene than the PER gene of diurnal animals. 2.) Differences in the sequences of PER genes can account for variance in the free running period (FRP) between varying organisms. 3.) Human PER gene homologs arose from prior duplication events throughout evolution. Motivation and Background: The biological clock is an endogenous mechanism that regulates the physiological activities of an organism. It was…

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    Genetic Disruptions

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    Mutations in genes can have complicated relationships and interactions that affect the phenotype of an organism. Possible genetic variations include nonsynonymous mutations, deletion of coding sequences, translocations, transposable element insertions, alterations within introns and disruption of regulatory elements, as examples. These alterations can cause a range of phenotypic effects from no effect to cell death for essential genes. Disruptions that result in an essential phenotype are…

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    Rac-Raw Research Paper

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    Downstream Targets Due to the lack of developing an effective Ras treatment, some have turned to targeting downstream effectors of Ras. Downstream effectors have a critical role in Ras carcinogenesis and are commonly found in KRAS mutated cancers. The most intensely targeted pathways are the Raf-MEK-ERK (MAPK) and PI3K-AKT-mTOR signaling pathways. Raf-MEK-ERK MAPK signaling is initiated through receptor tyrosine kinases after their activation by growth factors (Mccubrey 2006). Once Ras is in its…

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    Research into the genetics of deafness has shown that mutations in the CX26 gene, located on human chromosome 13q11, cause non-syndromic recessive deafness (9, 10). Expression of GJB2 has been documented in a variety of cells and tissues. In the cochlea, CX26-containing gap junctions are proposed to maintain K homeostasis by ferrying K away from the hair cells during auditory transduction(11). Recently, it has been shown…

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    scientifically prove if a suspect of committing a crime is truly the person who committed the crime. The four main components of a PCR are: DNA from a sample, nucleotides A, T, G, C, DNA polymerase, and primers. B. What is gene expression? List the two steps of gene expression and where they occur in the cell. (2 points) Genes are genetic codes or also known as sections of DNA. In order for this genes to be useful to a living organism, they need to be turned into useful products. The process…

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    Question 1: a) A: Promoter B: Splice site C: 5’ UTR D: Start codon E: Stop codon F: 3’ UTR b) The sum of the exons and introns (all in kilobases) (1.2+8+0.7+27+0.4+11+3.1) = 51.4 kb. c) The sum of the exons (all in kilobases) (1.2+0.7+0.4+3.1) = 5.4 kb. d) RNA Protein Truncation mutation in exon 2 Same length, same amount of RNA produced. Shorter in length (due to earlier stop codon), same amount of protein produced, usually changes the protein to non-functional, though not always. 3bp in…

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